The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Monday, December 6, 2010 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS MENOMINEE, Mich. Memorial held in Mich. school for Wisconsin shooter Hundreds of people showed up yesterday for a memorial to a 15-year-old Wisconsin boy who held his social studies class hostage before shooting himself last week, setting aside the terrifying stand- off to honor him as a quiet, helpful leader who loved the outdoors. Sam Hengel's family held the gathering in a school auditorium in Menominee, Mich., because they expected so many support- ers. Menominee lies just across the Menominee River from Marinette, " Wis., where Hengel held 26 class- mates and his teacher at gunpoint for nearly six hours. Barb Post of Marinette, Wis., said she didn't know Hengel's family but attended anyway to show support. "You care about the people and the family, and you understand it could happen to anybody," Post said. Why Hengel took his class hos- tage remains a mystery. Other stu- dents and his teacher have said he was well-liked and had many friends. The standoff last Monday at Marinette High School began when Hengel returned to his sixth-hour Western Civilization class from a bathroombreak. LINCOLN, Mont. Unabomber's 1.4-acre land on market for $69,500 A i.4-acre parcel of land in west- ern Montana that was once owned by Unabomber Ted Kaczynski is on the market for $69,500. The listing - by John Pistelak Realtyof Lincoln - offers potential buyers a chance to own a piece of "infamous U.S. history." "This is a one of a kind property and is obviously very secluded," the listingsays. It doesn'tsay who owns the property. The forested land, which had been listed at $154,500, does not have electricity or running water. Photos posted with the online listing show tall trees, chain-link fences topped by barbed wire and a tree with "FBI" carved into it, though it's not clear why. Pistelak said Friday he couldn't immedi- ately comment on the listing, and he didn't return phone messages yesterday. The property does not include Kaczynski's cabin, which is on dis- play at the Newseum in Washing- ton, D.C. CARACAS, Venezuela Chavez tells hotels to shelter those left homeless by flood President Hugo Chavez said yes- terday that he would force privately owned hotels to help shelter tens of thousands of Venezuelans who have left their homes due to floods and mudslides caused by weeks.of torrential rains. "I want the tourism hotels," Chavez said during a visit to the coastal state of Miranda. He said his government would pay for flood victims to remain at the hotels until the rains subside. "We will occupy them under lease." Chavez also announced that his government would build apart- ments near Simon Bolivar Interna- tional Airport, the country's largest and busiest airport, and other resi- dential complexes inside El Avila National Park, a mountainous swath of land separating Caracas * from the coast. WELLINGTON, New Zealand 23 protected seals clubbed to death New Zealand police and con- servation officials are hunting offenders who clubbed to death 23 protected fur seals, including new- born pups. Conservation Minister Kate Wilkinson said Monday some of the eight bludgeoned pups were just days old when they were killed. She's "beyond appalled" over the deliberate and abhorrent attacks. Wilkinson appealed for public W help to find those responsible. The attacks involved the Ohau Point seal colony on northern South Island and is north of the town of Kaikoura - an international whale- watching center. The conditions of the carcasses suggest the attacks took place over two weeks. - Compiled from Daily wire reports. Texas judge to hold hearing on death penalty law rc r DON HEUPEL/AP Dale Kasprzyk, acting head of the Drug Enforcement Administration in Buffalo, stands in front of a chart outlining suspects in a prescription drug ring. N.Y. bust. uncovers Rx ,drugs going to ealers 33 medical patients charged with selling pills to dealers BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) - Ethel Johnson couldn't get her pre- scription for pain medication filled fast enough. The 60-year- old Buffalo woman was hurt- ing - but investigators say that wasn't the reason for the rush. According to secretly record- ed telephone conversations, the sooner Johnson could pick up her pills, the more quickly she could sell them to her dealer. Her pain pills were destined for the street. Johnson is among 33 people charged so far in a large-scale investigation that has opened a window into an emerging class of suppliers in the illicit drug trade: medical patients, includ- ing many who rely on the pub- licly funded Medicaid program to pay for their appointments and prescriptions. She has pleaded not guilty. For the first time, the Buffalo investigators devoted the kinds of resources normally aimed at street drugs like heroin or crack - wiretaps, buys, surveillance and cross-agency cooperation to trace the drugs from phar- macy to street. Even they were taken aback by the burgeoning market for the kinds of pills found in medicine cabinets in typical American homes. "I have to admit we were sort of surprised at how big this had become," said Charles Tomaszewski, former supervi- sor of the DEA office. "The sub- urbs, the city, there was no area that wasn't touched by this." Often at no charge, the patients see a doctor, or sev- eral doctors, and come away with prescriptions for narcotic OxyContin and other pills they then sell to a dealer for as much as $1,000. If they are on Medic- aid, the program is billed about $1,060 for a typical 60-pill, 80-mg prescription, along with the $23-to-$39 cost of the doc- tor's visit. "These patients, in essence, become the source for the drugs," said Dale Kasprzyk, act- ing head of the Drug Enforce- ment Administration in Buffalo. "This is a lucrative under- ground business for people," he said. A report last year by the Gov- ernment Accountability Office estimated that 65,000 Medicaid beneficiaries in New York and four other states had visited six or more doctors in fiscal 2006 and 2007 to acquire duplicate prescriptions for controlled substances. The cost to Medicaid was $63 million for the drugs alone, excluding doctors' exams. The report examined Medicaid abuse in New York, Califor- nia, Illinois, North Carolina and Texas, high-volume states in Medicaid prescription drug payments. OxyContin, a time-release formulation of oxycodone, packs 12 hours' worth of pain relief into one tablet. It is espe- cially prized by drug abusers, authorities say, because it can be crushed and ingested, snort- ed or injected for the full nar- cotic impact, a heroin-like rush. The criminal cases brought in July by U.S. Attorney William Hochul's office in Buffalo illus- trate how patients are coached about which doctors to see and what to say when they get there. Prosecutors, in November court filings, said plea agreements are being negotiated. "Tell him, you know, you know you've been in a lot of pain, your throat is complain- ing. And then, you know, even throw a little of that stress on about your baby," alleged Buf- falo kingpin Michael McCall instructs a 40-year-old patient- supplier in a conversation recorded by investigators. "You need to tell doctor you need to go up to 90 (pills) 'cause ...you've been taking three a day and you ran out earlier," he says. When another patient, a 60-year-old woman, tells McCall a doctor is insisting on a urine test to be sure she's tak- ing the prescribed medication, McCall responds: "You want some?" and offers to bring the urine to her home. Dealers "don't have to get their money together, smuggle or reach out to connections in Mexico or anything," said Tomaszewski, who helped oversee the Buffalo crackdown before becoming the city's dep- uty police commissioner. "They were clever enough to find the sources of supply were in their own neighborhood." After buying the pills from patients, dealers resell them for an average of $1 a milligram, investigators say. With a single 80-mg OxyContin selling for $80, the 90-count bottle of pills McCall allegedly paid $1,000 or less for was worth $7,200 on the street. Authorities say he would meet his'suppliers in pharmacy parking lots or pick up the pills at their homes - even getting some patients' prescriptions filled himself, signing for them at the pharmacy. After OxyContin was intro- duced in 1996, it quickly became the top prescribed painkiller in the nation, and among the most abused. The Food and Drug Administration in April approved a new version of the painkiller with a coating designed to make the drug hard- er to crush and snort or inject. States have cracked down, as well, with New York and others adopting tamperproof prescrip- tion pads. To curtail abuse by Medicaid patients, several states, includ- ing Alaska, Florida, Maine, Ohio, South Carolina and West Virginia, require state approval before OxyContin prescrip- tions are filled, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. Harris County has sent 286 convicts to death row since 1982 HOUSTON (AP) - In the deeply Republican state that has executed more convicts than any other and the county that has sent the most to death row, an unusual legal proceeding will begin this week: A Democratic judge will hold a lengthy hearing on the con- stitutionality of the death penalty in Texas. State District Judge Kevin Fine surprised many Texans last spring when he granted what is usually a routine and typically rejected defense motion and ruled the death penalty unconstitution- al. His ruling came in the case of John Edward Green Jr., who is awaiting trial on charges he fatally shot a Houston woman and wounded her sister during a June 2008 robbery. Followinga torrent of criticism from Republican Gov. Rick Perry and other Texans, Fine clarified his ruling, saying the procedures the state follows in getting a death sentence are unconstitutional. Then Fine rescinded his ruling and ordered the hearing, which starts today, saying he needed more information before making a final decision. Most Texans consider the death penalty a fitting pun- ishment for the worst kind of crimes, and Harris County, which includes the state's largest city, Houston, has sent more inmates to the lethal-injection gurney than any other in Texas. But, anti- death penalty activists have cre- ated serious doubt recently about whether two men were wrongly executed. Fine is an unusual Houston jurist: a Democrat who sports dense tattoos and has said he's a recovering alcoholic and former cocaine user. He declined to be interviewed for this story, but he's said that he's taken notice of recent death row exonerations and his ruling will "boil down to whether or not an innocent person has actually been executed." But Fine also has said he has no personal interest in the death pen- alty, he believes the death penalty is constitutional and the hearing will be limited to issues related to Green's case. The hearing, which could last up to two weeks, is expected to include testimony that Green's attorneys say will show how flaws in such things as eyewitness identification, confes- sions and forensic evidence have led to wrongful convictions. Green's attorneys say the hear- ing is not a referendum on wheth- er Texas should have a death penalty. "We don't say a state doesn't have the right to have a death penalty," attorney Casey Keirnan said. "We're saying the way we do it in Texas under our statute is unconstitutional." The debate over possible wrongful executions in Texas has been fueled by the cases of Cameron Todd Willingham and Claude Jones. Willingham was put to death in 2004 after being convicted of burning down his home in Corsi- canain 1991 and killinghis 2-year- old daughter and 1-year-old twins. His execution has been ques- tioned since several fire experts found serious fault in the arson findings that led to his conviction. Jones was convicted inthe 1989 killing of a liquor store owner during a robbery near Point Blank, about 75 miles north of Houston. His 2000 execution was called into question after a new DNA test showed a hair that had been the only piece of physical evidence linking him to the crime scene didn't belongto him. Green's attorneys say they plan to bring up the Willngham and Jones cases at the hear- ing. They claim the state's death penalty procedures violate the Eighth Amendment right to free- dom from cruel and unusual pun- ishment because they create a "substantial risk" that innocent people are wrongfully convicted and sentenced to death. Harris County prosecutors, who unsuccessfully tried to get Fine removed from the case, declined to comment before today's hearing. But in a peti- tion filed last month, they asked the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals to stop the hearing, say- ing Fine doesn't have the author- ity to declare the state's death penalty law unconstitutional and higher courts, including the U.S. Supreme Court, have previously rejected Eighth Amendment chal- lenges to capital punishment. Prosecutors said Fine has shown "antagonism against the death penalty" and a jury should decide Green's fate. The appeals court is dominat- ed by Republicans and led by a chief judge who was disciplined for closing the court promptly at 5 p.m. while a death row inmate tried unsuccessfully to file an appeal hours before he was exe- cuted. But it denied the prosecu- tion's motion, saying it couldn't act until Fine ruled. Anti-death penalty groups have lauded Fine, while those in favor of capital punishment call him misguided. "It's appropriate that a Har- ris County judge is stepping up and saying we need to take a time out and look at the system," said Scott Cobb, president of the Texas Moratorium Network, a group that advocates for a suspension of executions in the state. Harris County has sentenced 286 people to death since Texas resumed executions in 1982, and 115 of those have been executed. Sign up and SAVE! i100 Off any MCAT, LSAT, GMAT, r GRE course. Now is the perfect .me mto prep with one of the nations eaders in test preparation. 'Small Classes 'Expert Inatructors Free Extra Help U.K. Parliament assistant Qoruc~r. kJ]P R J u%, U 1.x.0 %. u V p1"%-/ 1.16 1 WI Aide worked with lawmaker for more than two years LONDON (AP) - A member of the House of Commons Defense Committee said yesterday that his Russian assistant is facing deportation as a suspected spy. Mike Hancock said he was unaware that the security ser- vices had any suspicions about his aide, Katia Zatuliveter, 25, until she was detained. Hancock, 64, is a member of the House of Commons Defense Committee, and the European Security and Defense Assembly of the Western European Union, a security and defense organiza- tion. He is a Liberal Democrat, the junior party in the Conserva- tive-led government. In October, The Sunday Times reported that Home Sec- retary Theresa May has already approved Zatuliveter's deten- tion. The Home Office declined to comment, saying it never com- ments on individual cases. "She is not a Russian spy. I know nothing about espionage, but she has been subjected to a deportation order," Hancock said. "She is appealing it because she feels, quite rightly, that she has done nothing wrong." The Sunday Times said Zatu- liveter was stopped and ques- tioned at Gatwick airport in August when she returned to Britain. Hancock said the security ser- vices had never told him of their concerns about Zatuliveter. "No one has ever said to me under any circumstances whatsoever that she has been involved in anything like that," he said. "It is now in the hands of her lawyers. I am sure that in the end she will be proved to be right." Hancock said Zatuliveter had been a full-time researcher in his officer for 2 1/2 years, and earlier had worked there as an intern. "As far as I am concerned, there was nothing she was doing for me that was sensi- tive. Defense Select Commit- tee papers have been leaked to newspapers before now, and I have never read anything in a Defense Select Committee paper or report which was worth someone believing they couldn't get from another source," Han- cock said in an interview with the BBC. He said her work included hosting constituents visiting Parliament, writing speech- es and working on early day motions, which serve as expres- sions of lawmakers' opinions. "Katia was ambitious, she had ideas to go a lot further than just working for an MP in the House of Commons," Hancock said. Other legislators were cau- tious in commenting on the case. Yvette Cooper, the opposition Labor Party's spokeswoman on foreign affairs, said she knew nothing at Zatuliveter's case. "Depending on what happens in this individual case, if there do turn out to be problems and breaches of security here, then obviously the wider security in Parliament would need to be looked at," Cooper said. Conservative lawmaker Iain Duncan Smith said he had never met the woman. "Trouble is, I would say nor- mally this would be a joke but actually after what's been going on with some of the spies that Russia seems to have put into all sorts of places, you have totake it quite seriously really I suppose," Duncan Smith said in an inter- view with Sky News. In July, the government revoked the British citizen- ship of Anna Chapman who was among 10 people who pleaded guilty in the United States to procuring information for a for- eign government. H--, OK